Bob Lodge Chose Death Over Capture

by | Jun 4, 2026 | History & Legends, Military Aviation, News | 0 comments

On 10 May 1972, Major Robert “Bob” Lodge was flying an F-4D Phantom over North Vietnam when enemy fire disabled his aircraft. He had the knowledge to eject. He had the time. He chose not to. Lodge carried classified information about tactics, capabilities, and electronic warfare systems that would have been catastrophically valuable to the North Vietnamese and their Soviet advisors if he were captured and interrogated. So he rode his Phantom into the ground. Fifty-four years later, a bill introduced in Congress on 2 June 2026 seeks to award Lodge the Medal of Honor — the recognition that five Silver Stars and five Distinguished Flying Crosses apparently could not provide.

Quick Facts — Maj. Robert “Bob” Lodge

Unit: 555th Tactical Fighter Squadron (“Triple Nickel”), 432nd TRW

Aircraft: F-4D Phantom II

Role: Chief, Fighter Tactics Branch

Decorations: 5 Silver Stars (most in USAF history), 5 DFCs

Killed: 10 May 1972, North Vietnam

Legislation: Introduced 2 June 2026 by Rep. August Pfluger (R-TX)

The Tactician

Lodge was not a typical fighter pilot. As chief of the Fighter Tactics Branch for the 432nd Tactical Reconnaissance Wing at Udorn Royal Thai Air Force Base, he was responsible for developing the aerial combat tactics that American crews used against North Vietnamese MiGs. He pushed to equip the wing with more advanced F-4Ds. He devised new intercept profiles. He was, by every account, the intellectual engine of the 555th Fighter Squadron — the “Triple Nickel” — during one of the most intense periods of the air war. He also flew combat. Extensively. His five Silver Stars — the most ever awarded to any member of the Air Force or its predecessor, the Army Air Forces — were not desk decorations. They were earned in the cockpit over North Vietnam.

The Last Mission

On 10 May 1972, Lodge was leading a flight during a critical bombing campaign against the North. His aircraft was hit. The Phantom was crippled but not immediately destroyed — Lodge had time to eject. His weapons systems officer, Roger Locher, did eject and survived, evading capture for 23 days in enemy territory before being rescued in what remains one of the longest evasion episodes in USAF history. Lodge stayed with the aircraft. The reason, according to fellow pilots and the Air Force Association, was his knowledge. Lodge held classified information about electronic warfare capabilities, fighter tactics, and signals intelligence that would have been extraordinarily damaging if extracted during interrogation. He made a deliberate choice: protect the secrets, lose his life.
“Major Lodge sacrificed his life May 10, 1972 — during the critical bombing campaign against the North — to protect fellow members of the 555th Tactical Fighter Squadron and classified information vital to national security.”
Rep. August Pfluger (R-TX) — Former F-22 pilot, U.S. Congress

Overdue Recognition

The push for Lodge’s Medal of Honor has been led by Col. Charles B. “Chuck” DeBellevue, the last active-duty American fighter ace and a squadron mate of Lodge during the Vietnam War. The Air Force Association endorsed the legislation on the same day it was introduced. Lodge already holds more Silver Stars than any airman in history. The Medal of Honor would place his sacrifice alongside those of the most decorated Americans in combat. Whether Congress acts is another matter. But 54 years is long enough to wait. Sources: Air & Space Forces Magazine, Air Force Association, Rep. Pfluger’s office, The Aviationist

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